Organisers say the design for Richard III's tomb is "distinctive and elegant", as the relative whose DNA identified the king prepares to create his coffin

Richard III’s sarcophagus-shaped tomb will feature a deeply-cut cross in a carved slab of Swaledale stone above an English oak coffin made by the king’s 16-times great-nephew, sealed in a brick-lined vault beneath Leicester Cathedral.

Taking the idea of light breaking through the entrance to Jesus’s tomb as its starting point, the slits in the memorial – made with stone derived from long-dead fossils, quarried in north Yorkshire and resting on a marble plinth – will allow light to flow through it, illuminating a coat of arms recognising Richard’s “importance” and “character”.

Designed by London-based group van Heyningen and Haward Architects, the look of the tomb has been revealed less than a month after the High Court ruled that Richard III should rest in Leicester.

“The last few months have been busy months as we have planned in the background, knowing that natural justice would take its due course,” said The Very Reverend David Monteith, the Dean of Leicester, speaking at the cathedral.

“We need to press ahead with a degree of speed and determination as we look towards a reinterment in the spring.

“The design that has now been approved is very distinctive and elegant; it’s a design that evokes memory and is deeply respectful of history.

“It’s a design deeply imbued with spirituality, with a sense of stillness that will evoke, I think, a sense of wonder and awe in people, which is very much part of our mission.

‘This is a tomb which reflects the era in which it is designed as well as the solemn purpose for which it is commissioned.

“To do anything else would be a pastiche of a medieval tomb and would ignore the fact he is being reburied in the 21st century. That is part of King Richard’s story now.”

The total cost of the project, including a range of accompanying events and activities, is expected to cost around £2.5 million under an “aspirational budget” which the Dean suggested was a “small sum” compared to major ceremonial events such as royal weddings.

Works to the fabric of the cathedral are expected to account for around £1.4 million, with a £500,000 grant from the Diocese of Leicester and £100,000 in donations already raised.

Ibsen, whose DNA played a vital part in the final identification of Richard III’s body, has accepted an invitation to create his ruling ancestor’s coffin.

“Rather extraordinarily his day job is that of a cabinet maker – he’s a very fine carpenter,” said Monteith, who added that Ibsen’s precise design would not be revealed “for some time”.

“It just seems a very, very appropriate way to bring this part of the story to completion.”

“It’ll be a peaceful place for people to visit and reflect,” said Ford.

“It will help us to continue to offer a welcome to visitors and pilgrims. This is a place of similar significance within church architecture to the chancel where the Greyfriars buried King Richard in their church.”

Your name:Where you live:Please complete the CAPTCHA to show us you're human:

DISCLAIMER: Reader comments posted at www.culture24.org.uk are the opinion of the comment writer, not Culture24. Culture24 reserves the right to withdraw or withhold from publication any comments that are deemed to be hearsay or potentially libellous, or make false or unsubstantiated allegations or are deemed to be spam or unrelated to the article at which they are posted.